How Many Legs Do I Have? Non−Simple Roles in Number Restrictions Revisited
Yevgeny Kazakov‚ Ulrike Sattler and Evgeny Zolin
Abstract
The Description Logics underpinning OWL impose a well-known syntactic restriction in order to preserve decidability: they do not allow to use non-simple roles—-that is, transitive roles or their super-roles—-in number restrictions. When modeling composite objects, for example in bio-medical ontologies, this restriction can pose problems. Therefore, we take a closer look at the problem of counting over non-simple roles. On the one hand, we sharpen the known undecidability results and demon-strate that: (i) for DLs with inverse roles, counting over non-simple roles leads to undecidability even when there is only one role in the language; (ii) for DLs without inverses, two transitive and an arbitrary role are sufficient for undecidability. On the other hand, we demonstrate that counting over non-simple roles does not compromise decidability in the absence of inverse roles provided that certain restrictions on role inclusion axioms are satisfied
Details
| Book Title |
LPAR |
| Pages |
303−317 |
| Publisher |
Springer |
| Series |
Lecture Notes in Computer Science |
| Volume |
4790 |
| Year |
2007 |
Links
DOI (10.1007/978-3-540-75560-9_23)
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